2min chapter

In Our Time cover image

Kant's Copernican Revolution

In Our Time

CHAPTER

The Concept of Causation Is at the Heart of the Critique of Pure Reason

E kant's reading of hume shook him, but also provided him with a lot of materials for what he thought were the solutions and responses to hume's own sceptical conclusions. Hume was an empiricist and thought that everything was derived from experience. So it looks like everything's going to be a posteriori then, in the way that fion has been talking about. But if you a take that approach, it emerges hume thinks that the concept of causation lacks any kind of objective validity. We have in experience just simplifying one thing after another. What we don't have is a sensation of some things having to be connected in a certain way,. That which is the very

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